John Roscoe and Jenny Minard work in the greenhouse at Wild Tilth Farm in Sullivan, one of numberous Maine farms certified by the Real Organic Project. Credit: Courtesy of Jenny Minard

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“How do I move on from this? It’s not closure. It feels hollow and empty.”

—Shannon Richard, after the woman who shot her son, Daniel Ford-Coates, was sentenced to prison for manslaughter on Tuesday.

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Home values have skyrocketed in a strange group of Maine towns. Outside of the pricey coast, some cheaper inland areas have also seen a double-digit increase in home values.

A Bangor woman got 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to fatally shooting a man. Now that the woman who killed Daniel Ford-Coates has been sentenced, his mother has to figure out what’s next

A Maine lawmaker wants to prevent blank ballots from forcing ranked-choice runoffs. The bill from Rep. David Boyer, R-Poland, is a response to the strange race between Rep. Jared Golden and his Republican challenger Austin Theriault.

Maine hunters hope to see the state’s 72-hour gun purchase waiting period repealed. The gun rights group behind the lawsuit hopes the case makes it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

NEWS FROM AROUND THE STATE

Construction begins on 84-mile bike trail in Piscataquis

MAINE TOWN OF THE WEEK

Note: Last week we launched a new Morning Update section, featuring a fun factoid about a different Maine town each week. Got a good one? Email us at news@bangordailynews.com.

STOCKTON SPRINGS: Stockton Springs didn’t get the “Springs” added to its name until 1889, more than 30 years after its initial founding as Stockton, at the request of a local businessman who hoped to bottle the spring water that bubbled up from a natural spring in the town. Those ambitions never came to pass. Though Maine’s Center for Disease Control does not recommend drinking from unregulated roadside springs, and the hand pump that stood atop a hill in Stockton that offered passersby a drink of ice cold spring water was paved over years ago, the name of the town remains.

MAINE IN PICTURES

The holiday tree is installed and decorated in West Market Square in downtown Bangor on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2024. Credit: Lindsay Putnam / BDN

FROM THE OPINION PAGES

Maine’s Secretary of State Shenna Bellows addresses a livestream as election workers scan ballots, Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2024, in Augusta Maine. Credit: David Sharp / AP

“We’ve been saying it repeatedly for years, sometimes seemingly to no avail: People need to respect the process. Sometimes that process can take time. Sometimes it includes recounts and legal challenges. And sometimes, it even includes rulings and results that we don’t like.”

Editorial: Democracy requires patience and a respect for the law

LIFE IN MAINE

An 87-year-old slice of cake and other weird items are at the Bangor Historical Society. From private money printing plates to shoes that could fit Paul Bunyan, and more.

A rising star violinist conquered an ‘unplayable’ concerto in Orono. It was only the second time Lun Li had performed it with a full orchestra and he caressed the music to life at a breakneck speed, Judy Harrison writes.

It’s easier than you think to make cranberry juice at home. If you’re buying fresh cranberries for Thanksgiving, consider stocking up.

Leela Stockley is an alumna of the University of Maine. She lives in northern Maine with her two pugs and a cat. Send videos and photo submissions to lstockley@bangordailynews.com.